11 comments:

What's really funny is that you are so "tongue in cheek" and sarcastic and 90% of your readers don't get it! They rush off to build their own blog posts based on your blog posts and, what can I say? It's a hoot!!

As I've said myself sign waving and chanting has been a well-used tool of the left...and has a near 100% fail rate, and the News has a habit of picking out the most whacked-out nut from the crowd for a sound byte.

As you quoted me, it was nice to see the turnout, and nice to see the noted differences (things like the behavior of the crowd, as well as the state they LEFT DC inhttp://rattailbastard.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-dont-know-what-it-means.html )

But in the end, to quote the Bard: "it is a taleTold by an idiot, full of sound and fury,Signifying nothing."

John and Mike W., It sounds to me like the Constitution has it ass backwards. Guns are a right but health care is a privilege. Should be the other way around, if you ask me.

Maybe this is a good example to highlight the tremendous anachronism which is the pro-gun position when based on the 2nd Amendment. In 18th century America, health care as we know it today did not exist. Through the decades and centuries, health care has grown to be exactly the kind of thing the "framers" would have included as a right, had it existed back then.

In the same way, we need to modernize our constitutional view of guns.

Guns and health care... MikeB, drop the gun issue while debating insurance, and medical care. They are two different issues.

I stand behind the statement that insurance should not be a privilege but a right. While insurance is not a "god given" right, we are granted unalienable rights in the Deceleration of Independence. For what it is worth I believe that life and the pursuit of happiness tie in with health care. Without some type of medical insurance, it greatly reduces ones life, and the ability to pursue happiness. As one gets older, or becomes ill, it directly affects these two unalienable rights.

Besides, the hypocrisy of many so called religious people no longer astounds me. We talk about being good ~insert religion here~, yet we fail to see the need to help our brothers and sisters. I got mine so fuck you, is more the line I see from many people. I'd love to see half these people denouncing a public option or single payer options, try and keep insurance and some standard of living on minimum wage.

Oh yeah live within your means. Live on $300.00 a week. Lets see how well you do. Get a better job, hard to do when unemployment increases by around half a million a week. Get an education. How to pay for it. Pell grants pay about $5000 a year, the rest of the tab comes from loans. Move to where the jobs are. I like that notion, willing to pay to move these people to where the decent paying jobs are?

It all comes down to I got mine. Not everyone has been so lucky, or skilled, to be able to pay for insurance. They have not been so lucky as to be able to save a nest egg.